Sprout Lets You Build Single Property Widgets

Building Flash files used to be easy.

I remember playing around with ‘tweening’ in early versions of Flash, but the software has really evolved over the years from being a cute animation package to a serious platform to build Web-grade applications on.

Recently I upgraded to Adobe’s CS3 on my home machine and I installed Flash out of curiosity (it had been years since I’d dug around in it). Upon launching, I quickly realized I barely recognized the software anymore and promptly binned it since it looked far too complicated for me to take the time and figure out.

Thankfully however, there are now 3rd party web sites starting to spring up that can help you build Flash files in a very easy way.

Sprout Builder

Sprout is just one of those places.

Sprout is a web-based Flash editor built in Flash that lets you build your own Flash files (how Meta is that?).

Basically, it’s a very simple way to build out your own Flash-based widgets. It’s just dragging and dropping active elements, linking in actions and then publishing it all in a package to the web. Pretty easy really.

Here’s a couple widgets I built last night. It took me roughly a couple of hours or so to make them – including the time it took to figure out how to use the web site, so not a huge investment.

FOREM Widget

Connect SF 2008 Widget

You can also see the Connect SF 2008 Widget in my sidebar.

I’ve written about how you can use Flash to create a simple slide show widget of your listings before (see Splash Some Flash On Your Site or Creating a Killer Listing Presentation, Part II).

And while those services are still great – Sprout lets you take it one step further; by building a widget that pulls in not only photos, but video, RSS feeds and audio too, allowing you to create a much richer experience.

(I should mention too, that you can build a widget in any size – I just chose to use the same 300×250 template for both that I created)

Here are some ideas for widgets you could build to promote yourself or a listing using Sprout.

In a Realtor widget:

  • A video introduction of yourself and your services hosted on Youtube.
  • A feed of your Trulia Voices Answers (via RSS).
  • Your latest Twitter Tweets (via RSS).
  • Latest ActiveRain or Blog posts (via RSS).
  • Links to Social Network profiles (including your new Inman.com profile of course, right?).

Or to promote a single property:

  • Photos from a Flickr feed (pulled from a unique tag, the widget would automatically be updated with any new pics you take subsequently).
  • A Yahoo map of the property’s location.
  • A detailed listing description (of course).
  • A video walkthru of the property.
  • Links to the listing on MLS or Zillow.

The great thing about either widget is that they are dynamic, so your content always remains fresh. But more importantly they are highly portable and publishable – meaning you can put them wherever you want; your Facebook profile, your blog or your ActiveRain profile, for example.

But here’s why that is important.

Because of these two attributes (dynamic and portable), many feel the future of the web will widgetized. And this definitely makes sense in the context of real estate too.

Single property web sites (or for that matter – any static listing) may be fine for SEO purposes but ultimately, since they aren’t transportable, they have limited marketing value outside of the wow factor they give the home sellers.

And precisely because they’re not transportable, you force people to come to you (and incur the cost of doing so) rather than taking the information to them – the classic push versus pull dilemma.

Services like Sprout however (and to a more limited degree, vFlyer which also has widgets) could then signal the rise of the Single Property Widget. A whole new way of a creating, publishing and distributing real estate listings online.

And the best thing is you don’t have to be have a degree in computer science to do it anymore.


RSS Feed for This Post11 Comment(s)

  1. Will | Mar 14, 2008 | Reply

    Very Interesting! Thank you for sharing this. I don’t see it replacing the single page listing sheet (because of the SEO alone) but I do see this as a valuable tool for a front page and love the “share” aspect (just look at all the networks it could go viral on). To be truly effective you’ll really have to get creative beyond the better-than-standard marketing style. You’ll have to be entertaining.
    As a tech-geek who is in real estate I may just have to see what this can do on my next listing.

  2. Hi! I'm Rudy from Trulia . Very cool Joel! | Mar 14, 2008 | Reply

    Hi Joel!

    Nice find…..Love it……

    Rudy

  3. matt | Mar 14, 2008 | Reply

    That’s great for an about me section in the sidebar, and possibly adding your listings to it, but not as a single property website (widget)

  4. JeffX | Mar 14, 2008 | Reply

    BLIDGETOPIA!

  5. huntsville | Mar 15, 2008 | Reply

    wonderful! I will give it a try

  6. Kevin Tomlinson | Mar 15, 2008 | Reply

    Hey Joel
    This stuff is amazing!
    I’m sort of brain-dead when it comes to stuff like this…

    Could you create a sample widget for say, like
    >>Links to Social Network profiles (including your new Inman.com profile of course, right?).

    I think this would be handy and cool.

  7. Kevin Tomlinson | Mar 15, 2008 | Reply

    One last question, though it may be a bit off topic:

    What do you think of two sidebar blogs? Do you think they are confusing for the average real estate consumer?
    I’m toying with the idea from going to one to two sidebars.

    Thoughts?

  8. Overland Park Real Estate | Mar 15, 2008 | Reply

    Joel,
    Thanks so much for the find. Your blog keeps me ahead of the technology curve and it is greatly appreciated.

  9. Anne Arundel Agent | Mar 16, 2008 | Reply

    This is cool. Technology is certainly changing the way we market our listings.

    And to Kevin – I like the two sidebar blogs. I think if you lay out right, it’ll work out fine.

  10. Aaron Sperling | Mar 17, 2008 | Reply

    I absolutely love builder tools like Sprout. They do lower the bar in terms of creating Flash content.
    I would note that the vFlyer has widgets specifically designed for Single Property marketing. vFlyer also has library of widgets that display a set of listings. Once a flyer has been created on vFlyer, a single property widget can be created in seconds. Really.

  11. G. Dewald | Sep 8, 2008 | Reply

    Kevin:

    Probably retaggr does what you’re after in terms of links to social media profiles. But another way I’ve used Sprout is to create a simple feed for my blog which I can then insert on social media profiles. For example, here’s my profile at ChaseNation:

    http://chasenation.com/profile/GDewald

    The ability to pull in feeds allows you to really make significant use of your existing content.

    Great article Joel! I’ve very jealous you beat me to the punch on this one.

2 Trackback(s)

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